Ear styling is officially in — at least according to 2017’s Pinterest 100, the social scrapbooking site’s annual trend report. Based on recent increases in saved pins, Pinterest’s Insights team is betting that the multiple earrings look will be huge this year. (Per the report, there’s been a 255 percent increase in interest in “multiple earrings” over the past year.)

We wholeheartedly agree. Call it the Zoë Kravitz effect, but multiple ear piercings have made their way into the mainstream. And we’re not talking just two or three holes. Fashion fixtures like Kravitz, Scarlett Johansson, Jessica Alba and Nicole Richie (one of the early supporters of the trend) are known to sport upward of four earrings at once (though Richie has toned down her ear look as of late).

Fashion’s cool kids have picked up on the once fringe trend. They’re here for more earrings — and less conventional placement. Jewelry designers have risen to the occasion, churning out trompe l’oeil lobe huggers, twirl hoops, ear crawlers and cuffs for those who love the effect of multiple earrings…but hate needles. Piercing salons like Manhattan’s New York Adorned, headed up by Kravitz favorite J. Colby Smith, specialize in arranging multiple earrings in asymmetric, aesthetically pleasing patterns that even the most traditional fashion gals can get behind.

Ready to test out your jewelry layering skills? Piercers like Smith and his New York Adorned colleagues Adrian Castillo and Cassi Lopez, along with jewelry brands like Amarilo and Monocrafft, fill their Instagram pages with tons of ear-spiration. Click through the gallery below to see some seriously decked out ears — and shop our favorite layering pieces of the moment. (One caveat: While these looks err toward the minimal and boho-inspired, we like to anchor our ear look with a serious statement piece.)

Cordelia Tai is a freelance staff writer at theFashionSpot. Her work has appeared on Refinery29 and the Huffington Post, among others. Ultimately, she plans to segue into fashion merchandising so that she can (judiciously) online shop for a living.